Dr Karl - Andrew Woltin from the Department of Psychology at Royal Holloway, who led these studies, said: «There is more and more evidence that the powerful more strongly rely on
internal cues when making judgments.
Not exact matches
When exercise is self - paced and work rate is free to vary in response to external and
internal physiological
cues, then a complex system is proposed to be responsible for alterations in exercise intensity, possibly through altered activation of skeletal muscle motor units.
Pushing food on a child who's not hungry may dull the
internal cues that help kids know
when they've eaten enough.
They need to decide whether to eat, what they will eat, and how much to eat — this is how they learn to recognize the
internal cues that tell them
when they're hungry and
when they're full.
When left to their own devices (and free from invasive parental pressure, Ellyn Satter would want me to add), kids naturally follow their
internal hunger
cues.
When feeding at the breast is not always feasible, supplementing breastfeeding with expressed breastmilk is a good alternative, but special attention is needed for infants»
internal feeding
cues while bottle - feeding.
When the body's
internal sense of time doesn't match up with outside
cues, people can suffer, and not just from a lack of sleep.
When it comes time to leave, this person has only
internal and external
cues to help make the decision whether to drive home or call a cab.
A new series of studies by academics at Royal Holloway, University of London and at University of London College found that people who have social power are strongly influenced by
internal body
cues stemming from their motor system
when making judgements about preferences of paintings, objects, movements or letter sequences.
Dr Woltin concluded: «Our findings suggest that mechanisms need to be put into place that make sure power holders do not favour
internal cues over other information available to them
when they make important decisions.»
So
when we cross multiple time zones, our
internal clock — which takes its
cues from
internal and external factors like light, darkness, temperature, etc. — needs time to adapt to the new location.
It teaches you to use
internal cues, like hunger, fullness, and how food makes you feel, instead of external diet rules that dictate what,
when, and how to eat.
Assessing the effect of altering attentional focus, Karst et al. (2004) explored muscle activity of the abdominals
when performing the curl up with and without
internal cues to activate either the rectus abdominis or the external oblique.
Furthermore, rectus abdominis, external and
internal oblique muscle activity was superior
when performing the back squat following the
internal cue compared with performing the back squat on an unstable surface (a BOSU ball).